Search Results - "Chamberlain, Natasha"
-
1
Mule trains to mountain roads: the role of working mules in supporting resilient communities in the Himalayas
Published in Frontiers in veterinary science (31-07-2024)“…Working equids play a central role in mountainous communities, but their work often goes unnoticed by the wider world, with sparse documentation of their role,…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
2
Bonded labour and donkey ownership in the brick kilns of India: A need for reform of policy and practice
Published in Animal welfare (2023)“…Slavery, in the form of 'debt-bondage', is rife in Indian brick kilns, where the enforcement of labour laws is poor. Working equids support brick-kiln workers…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
3
Cultural "Blind Spots," Social Influence and the Welfare of Working Donkeys in Brick Kilns in Northern India
Published in Frontiers in veterinary science (29-04-2020)“…Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) work across the globe to improve the welfare of working equids. Despite decades of veterinary and other interventions,…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
4
"Not All Who Wander Are Lost": The Life Transitions and Associated Welfare of Pack Mules Walking the Trails in the Mountainous Gorkha Region, Nepal
Published in Animals (Basel) (15-11-2022)“…Equids in general experience transient lives where ownership may change multiple times, for working equids this can be more extreme where ownership changes are…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
5
Report on the Rock Art of South West Samburu District, Kenya
Published in Azania (01-01-2006)“…Little rock art research has been undertaken in the Rift Valley region of northern Kenya. This report presents data derived from 21 sites located in Samburu…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
6
Investigating the influence of climate change, conflict and development interventions on livelihood resilience in pastoralist societies: a multiple case study of the borana and samburu
Published 01-01-2014“…East African pastoralist societies are characterised by their inherent adaptability to climatic variability, by way of their sophisticated resource management…”
Get full text
Dissertation